DIY Fall Floral Centrepiece

For this month’s project I’m making a DIY Fall Floral Centrepiece for our Thanksgiving table, so you’ll have to tell me what you think! Back when I joined the 12 months of DIY series and saw the line-up of items, I was most excited for the floral challenge. I love a good flower arrangement; I love it so much that I can never really bring myself to buy the fake ones – no matter how beautiful – because I enjoy making my own.

*Aflora.com provided the product for review, but all thoughts are my own. Thank you for supporting the brands that make PMQ for two possible.

I guess it’s the same thing inside me that enjoys arranging art on the wall, knick knacks on a shelf, and picking paint colours. I “feel” the items into place and then fine-tune. There isn’t always a rationale as to why, but there’s always a feeling.

Before I launch into my beautiful arrangement I thought I’d take you all on a quick refresher about floral arrangements. In today’s world, Putnam & Putnam are the kinds of fresh and contemporary florals. If you’re Instagram, they’re an account you should be following.

Gone are the prim and proper arrangements of our mothers’ day, in are the kinda wild and very energetic arrangements of today.

You know how flowers usually sit in a vase contained to an orb-like crest? Well, nowadays a good arrangement reads like a classic masterpiece with axes of light, dark corners, the Fibonacci sequence and so much more. Pinterest is chock-a-bloc full of beautiful arrangements that seem to defy gravity and pull from the most heavenly and exotic gardens. Take me there!

I’m drawing on our contemporary masters for my arrangement. I’m bringing you high, low, left, right, and all around. If what I said doesn’t make sense now, wait until the end.

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Materials

Bowl, vase, coupe etc. Basically anything that is considered a receptacle that you want to place flowers in. Since there’s no water, it can be almost anything!

For this arrangement I went for the modern inverted designs. Instead of building towards a central point, we’re working off-kilter with height and width.

Step 1: Place your halved foam in the middle of your coupe.

Step 2: Add reindeer moss around the edge so that you won’t see the foam through the glass, but also so that it hides all the stems.

Step 3: Place your highest point. In my case it was some leftover rose buds from my fall wreath. I later added the berries to complete the profile.

Step 4: Place your large blooms low, and around the coupe. You want people to see beautiful blooms from any angle.

Step 5: Add your lowest element. In this case I have three greenery stems hanging low and wide out of the coupe. They add a wilder element to the arrangement and contribute to a balanced profile.

Step 6: Add your smaller flowers. I got the mini ranunculus to use for filler. They’re the extra detail that catches the eye when up close for inspection. Use them to fill almost all the remaining gaps.

Step 8: Add the remaining greenery to fill the last gaps, and to lift blooms into place, or feather around the base to hide any gaps. I purchased the dusty miller for this exact purpose, but a stray sprig of berries also did the job and provided the perfect treat for those whose gaze traverses the arrangement from start to finish.

Step 9: Spin ‘er around! Make sure you got it right from all angles. I love the “front” of my arrangement, but the sides and back also have their own profiles that are equally enchanting.

This is the front

This is the back

This is a side

This beauty will be premiering on our Thanksgiving tablescape, which will be unveiled on October 3rd, so stand-by! In the meantime, make sure you checkout afloral.com as their selection is out of this world. When I say that the lamb’s ear is soft like a lamb’s ear, I’m not joking. Also have you seen the close-ups of the blooms? The details are insane!

In the meantime, checkout these other floral crafts from the 12 months of DIY bloggers.

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Comments

super stunning! if you ever (not sure how you could but…) get bored of this – send it to me, so pretty! I love the colours and how you arranged it. And seriously, how amazing is the quality of these flowers!?

I have so enjoyed your DIY projects the past year and i can tell that you are truly an artist. This floral arrangement is stunning. It’s beauty starts with the green goblet style vase. How you arranged the silk flowers looks like the work of a professional. The photography really captures how beautiful the silk flowers were to work with. Bravo!

it’s fairly big actually! Like, I’m not sure what you would put it in from a food perspective, but it’s big enough to fit half an 8″ foam ball – if that makes sense.
I love love love it! Especially now that the trend is towards less symmetrical, more organic arrangements.

Such a beautiful arrangement! I love the wild feeling of and I definitely could use the steps. I never know where to start with flower arrangements. I am more of a silk flower kind of girl since real ones last so little time and I love how authentic these look!

So pretty, Ariel! I can’t wait to see your Thanksgiving table! We celebrate twice – once for Canadian Thanksgiving and once for American. We call it Camerican Thanksgiving.. my kids love it! I love that I get to celebrate it Canadian style..

[…] holiday tables with an amazing faux flower centerpiece like this DIY Fall Floral Centerpiece, found HERE. Every angle on this arrangement has a unique look. Silk flowers are a great way to get those […]